I personally believe that the Communist Party of China is doomed in some sense, I don't know when, but I know its doomed. There will be short term disaster in China, as well as the rest of the world when the shit hits the fan soon enough
My view, however, is that the long term trends are going to their way. Chinese people are hard working and their society is becoming freer by the day, while the West is dying and becoming less freer by the day. In the West, old people work harder then the younger and we don't value education. I'm just trying to be real about my own country.
TL;DR China, regardless of political system, is growing, and the West is dying.
>>TL;DR China, regardless of political system, is growing, and the West is dying. I just hope that US foreign policy of evangelizing liberal capitalism throws half of the world into strife and forces capital to rebase itself back into the west.
China needs a real solution to its demographics problems. A really option is always a land war. in SE Asia over the China sea and the killing of men and stealing of women.
As a young America, I am happy to see China rise, though I wish it were more politically free. That said, its rise means the U.S. should butt out of the region gradually. I hope part of the Kim/Trump talks get our troops out of Korea entirely.
don't think so. asians value stability. one belt one road PROMOTES peace in the some of the most dangerous regions in the world while the US is hellbent on fostering instability everywhere
Connor Flores
China has like 15years of water left, Resources wars inc
Zachary Brooks
good thing their population is exponentially declining
>China, regardless of political system, is growing, and the West is dying KeK China's Pollution Has Reached Apocalyptic Levels youtube.com/watch?v=OwOBRH56Ic0
>citing some white guy with an asian fetish youtube channel >30 year old who wears a suit but talks like a high schooler Hard data would be more convincing
Eugenics is the only solution for anyone left behind.
Angel Robinson
a threadly reminder to disregard weaboo shills
On March 4, 2014, the Chinese premier, Li Keqiang, told almost 3,000 delegates at the National People’s Congress and many more watching live on state television, “We will resolutely declare war against pollution as we declared war against poverty.”
The statement broke from the country’s longstanding policy of putting economic growth over environment, and many wondered whether China would really follow through.
Four years after that declaration, the data is in: China is winning, at record pace. In particular, cities have cut concentrations of fine particulates in the air by 32 percent on average, in just those four years.
Nolan Torres
China is winning, at record pace [citation needed] or do you believe the chink government? >2016 gave way to 2017, residents of Beijing, Tianjin, and many other northern Chinese cities suffered through the longest stretch of stifling air pollution ever recorded in the country >people in 70 northern Chinese cities were enveloped by similar days of haze composed of high concentrations of particles less than 2.5 μm in diameter (PM2.5) cen.acs.org/articles/95/i4/Peering-Chinas-thick-haze-air.html